《自我的界限:论海德格尔》r·马修·肖基著(书评)

IF 0.7 1区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY
Nicolai Knudsen
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The next chapters turn away from our understanding of \"outward\" entities and initiates a series of \"inward\" meditative steps supposed to clarify the unitary and a priori basis rendering [End Page 718] these regions intelligible. Chapter 3 analyzes the first meditative step, namely, Heidegger's account of being-in and the trinity of understanding, discourse, and self-finding that constitute the structure of care. Chapter 4 shows, in a second step, that the care structure is unified by originary temporality. Originary temporality is, Shockey argues, the necessary temporal form that Dasein spontaneously gives to itself. Heidegger abandoned the SZ project at this point, but Shockey ambitiously undertakes to complete it by showing, in chapter 5, how Heidegger found a final meditative step in Kant's concept of imagination. On Heidegger's controversial interpretation of Kant, the imagination is the common root of understanding and sensibility and, importantly, an anticipation of his own concept of originary temporality. Imagination, Shockey explains, is the general capacity for \"making present that which is absent\" (141). Based on this argument, Shockey concludes that \"in doing ontology, we imagine ourselves imagining being\" (148). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

书评:《自我的界限:海德格尔随笔》,作者:R.马修·肖基自我的界限:海德格尔的存在与时间论。纽约:劳特利奇出版社,2021。224页。精装书,160.00美元。在这本内容丰富、雄心勃勃的书中,马修·肖基(R. Matthew Shockey)颇具争议地声称,海德格尔的《存在与时间》(SZ)继承了笛卡尔和康德的理性主义。为了证明这一点,肖基将现象学本体论描述为反思和想象的哲学自我质疑的规范性惰性结果。书中有四个越来越重要的问题:(1)我该如何生活?(2)成为那种能够而且必须问“我该如何生活”的人是什么感觉?(3)事物被认作存在的各种方式之间有什么统一性呢?(4)我们为什么要追求形而上学和本体论?第1-6章重构了海德格尔对二阶和三阶问题的回答,而第7章则将其与一阶和四阶问题联系起来。关键的主张是海德格尔是一个“康德式的笛卡尔主义者”。然而,肖基承认,海德格尔并非“被需要驳斥怀疑论、世俗主观主义的支持者、表征主义的认识论家或实体二元论所驱使”(9)。相反,他的主张是,海德格尔遵循康德和笛卡尔的信念,首先,本体论必须确定一种形式的“先验知识”作为可解性的基础,其次,本体论的探究需要一种深思熟虑的、反思的和自我质疑的方法。这个论点建立在对SZ已出版部分的重建之上,它涉及一系列沉思的步骤,这些步骤应该把我们从对此在的分析(二阶问题)带到存在的意义(三阶问题)。第一章解释了为什么Seinsfrage(三阶问题)需要对此因(二阶问题)进行分析,并论证了本体论要求我们从我们所有的本体论特征(即所有构成我、我和你、你的东西)中抽象出来,因为本体论的目的是识别任何本体论调查者共有的“界限”(47)。肖基声称,这使得海德格尔的存在分析以一种大致康德式的方式进行批判,以一种大致笛卡尔式的方式进行冥想(31,47)。第二章在对世界和存在的分析之后,向我们介绍了我们不是的实体的三个区域:现成的、现在的、手头的和其他此在。接下来的章节从我们对“外在”实体的理解转向,并开始了一系列“内在”的冥想步骤,旨在澄清统一和先验的基础,使这些区域变得可理解。第三章分析了沉思的第一步,即海德格尔对存在的描述,以及构成关怀结构的理解、话语和自我发现的三位一体。第四章在第二步中表明,原始时间性统一了关怀结构。肖基认为,原始的时间性是此在自发赋予自身的必要的时间形式。海德格尔在这一点上放弃了SZ计划,但肖基雄心勃勃地承诺完成它,在第5章中,展示海德格尔如何在康德的想象概念中找到最后的沉思步骤。在海德格尔对康德的有争议的解释中,想象是知性和感性的共同根源,更重要的是,它是对他自己的原始时间性概念的一种期待。肖基解释说,想象力是一种“把缺失的东西呈现出来”的一般能力(141)。基于这一论点,肖基得出结论:“在做本体论时,我们想象自己在想象存在”(148)。在重构了最后的、缺失的沉思步骤之后,肖基在第六章中提出了他认为的SZ未被书写(或被抛弃)的部分的故事,也就是说,笛卡尔和康德,当被视为本体论家而不是认识论家时,声称存在的统一性位于我们先验的本体论(自我)理解中是正确的,尽管他们没有意识到这种统一是想象的和时间的,而不是实质性的或逻辑的,而且可解性的先验基础开辟了几个不同的区域……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Bounds of Self: An Essay on Heidegger's by R. Matthew Shockey (review)
Reviewed by: The Bounds of Self: An Essay on Heidegger's by R. Matthew Shockey Nicolai Knudsen R. Matthew Shockey. The Bounds of Self: An Essay on Heidegger's Being and Time. New York: Routledge, 2021. Pp. 224. Hardcover, $160.00. In this rich and ambitious book, R. Matthew Shockey controversially claims that Heidegger's Being and Time (SZ) is an heir to the rationalism of Descartes and Kant. To show this, Shockey develops a provocative account of phenomenological ontology as the normatively inert outcome of reflective and imaginative philosophical self-questioning. Four questions of an increasingly higher order frame the book (2–6): (1) How shall I live? (2) What is it to be the kind of being who can and must ask "how shall I live?" (3) What unity is there to the various ways in which things are taken to be? (4) Why should we pursue metaphysics and ontology? Chapters 1–6 reconstruct Heidegger's answers to the second- and third-order questions, while chapter 7 relates them back to the questions of the first- and fourth-order. The key claim is that Heidegger was a "Kantian Cartesian." Shockey, however, admits that Heidegger was not "driven by a need to refute skepticism, a proponent of a worldly subjectivism, a representationalist epistemologist, or a substance dualist" (9). Rather, the claim is that Heidegger follows Kant and Descartes in believing, first, that ontology must identify a form of "a priori knowledge" as the basis of intelligibility and, second, that ontological inquiry requires a deliberate, reflective, and self-questioning method. The argument rests on a reconstruction of the published parts of SZ as involving a series of meditative steps that are supposed to take us from the analytic of Dasein (the second-order question) to the meaning of being (the third-order question). Chapter 1 explains why the Seinsfrage (the third-order question) requires the analytic of Dasein (the second-order question) and argues that ontology requires that we abstract from all our ontical characteristics (i.e. all the things that make me, me and you, you) insofar as the aim of ontology is to identify the "bounds" that are shared by any ontological inquirer (47). This, Shockey claims, makes Heidegger's existential analytics critical in a roughly Kantian way and meditational in a roughly Cartesian way (31, 47). Chapter 2 follows the analysis of worldhood and being-with in introducing us to three regions of entities that we are not: the ready-to-hand, the present-at-hand, and other Dasein. The next chapters turn away from our understanding of "outward" entities and initiates a series of "inward" meditative steps supposed to clarify the unitary and a priori basis rendering [End Page 718] these regions intelligible. Chapter 3 analyzes the first meditative step, namely, Heidegger's account of being-in and the trinity of understanding, discourse, and self-finding that constitute the structure of care. Chapter 4 shows, in a second step, that the care structure is unified by originary temporality. Originary temporality is, Shockey argues, the necessary temporal form that Dasein spontaneously gives to itself. Heidegger abandoned the SZ project at this point, but Shockey ambitiously undertakes to complete it by showing, in chapter 5, how Heidegger found a final meditative step in Kant's concept of imagination. On Heidegger's controversial interpretation of Kant, the imagination is the common root of understanding and sensibility and, importantly, an anticipation of his own concept of originary temporality. Imagination, Shockey explains, is the general capacity for "making present that which is absent" (141). Based on this argument, Shockey concludes that "in doing ontology, we imagine ourselves imagining being" (148). Having reconstructed the final and missing meditative step, Shockey in chapter 6 presents what he thinks would have been the story of the unwritten (or discarded) division 3 of SZ, namely, that Descartes and Kant, when read as ontologists rather than epistemologists, were right in claiming that the unity of being is located in our a priori ontological (self-) understanding, although they failed to realize that this unity is imaginative and temporal rather than substantial or logical and that the a priori basis for intelligibility opens up several distinct regions of...
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